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That's what he says in Rom 3. It is the work of Christ that saves; not the deeds of man. If both Jews and gentiles are judged by their own works, they fall short.
Ah yes, but he never says this. He says over and over again that the works of the Torah, ie being Jewish, do not save you. He doesn't say "through works no man will be made righteous" but "through works of the Torah". He also doesn't say "one is made righteous by faith apart from works" but again "apart from works of the Torah."
The entire point of Romans 3 is that the righteousness of God comes separate from following the Torah, ie being a Jew. There being "no distinction" is between Jew and non-Jew.
What makes it grace is that it was offered as a gift, unilaterally while we were enemies, and it involved passing over our former sins up til that point. The same form of mercy God showed in the OT - until the cup of iniquity was full. This is the warning of the gospel, at some point that patience ends. The form this grace took was in the blood of Christ which takes away the sin of the world, allows non-Jews to approach, and that grace is received by faithfulness - without regard to whether you are a Jew or a non-Jew.
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Again, Rom 3:21-30, which he bolsters with the explanation of the faith of Abraham.
Yes, the faithfulness of Abraham is what made him righteous, pleasing before God. Romans 3 and Ephesians 2 are the same message. In the Jewish Messiah Jesus, those of the other nations were brought near and reconciled. St Paul brought this message of hope to them, what was previously a mystery. What was the mystery? "Those of the nations are fellow heirs, members of the same body, and partakers of the promise [of Abraham] in Jesus Christ." Abraham is brought forward as an example because he was pleasing to God
before he was circumcised. His circumcision was a mark confirming his faithfulness, which is why he is father to faithful people of the nations, and faithful people of the Jews. This of course is perfectly consonant with St James saying "Wasn't Abraham our father justified by works when he offered up his son Isaac on the altar? You see that faithfulness was active along with his works, and faithfulness was completed by his works; and the Scripture was fulfilled that says, "Abraham believed God, and it was counted to him as righteousness" -- and he was called a friend of God. You see that a person is justified by works and not by faith alone." St Paul and St James aren't at odds. Faithfulness working through love, faithfulness completed by works.
The point being made is that faithfulness is not completed by
works of the Torah. When you conflate good works with works of the Torah, the entire message is completely lost.
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Is 29:16 primarily demonstrating the unquestionable sovereignty of the creator over His creation to do with them as He pleases
You're right - I missed this. Which is great, because it is even more in line with the theme of this passage. The rule of thumb that St Paul knows scripture is always good. It is addressed to people hiding deep from the Lord as if he doesn't know, and that turns things upside down. The objection here is that God knows and will not be confused or tricked by people.
Because this people draw near with their mouth
and honor me with their lips,
while their hearts are far from me,
and their fear of me is a commandment taught by men,
therefore, behold, I will again
do wonderful things with this people,
with wonder upon wonder;
and the wisdom of their wise men shall perish,
and the discernment of their discerning men shall be hidden."
Ah, you who hide deep from the Lord your counsel,
whose deeds are in the dark,
and who say, "Who sees us? Who knows us?"
You turn things upside down!
Shall the potter be regarded as the clay,
that the thing made should say of its maker,
"He did not make me";
or the thing formed say of him who formed it,
"He has no understanding"?
This doesn't end saying yeah, and some of those people are damned forever and others aren't. It goes on to say that the blind see, the meek get joy, the poor exult, the ruthless come to nothing, those who watch to do evil will be cut off, and more importantly the children of Jacob (note: THE GENTILES) will be in his midst - those who go astray in spirit come to understanding, and will accept instruction. Which, you know, is the whole point of Romans 9-11, that the gentiles returning reconstitute all Israel, united Ephraim and Judah. The branches broken off make room for those to be grafted in. St Paul is just exegeting this passage.
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just the broader sense that they received justice just as any sinner that does not have faith, and they died under the judgement that all sinners receive. They did not receive the mercy of being passed over and granted life.
Every single person from Adam to now, excepting Christ Jesus, Enoch, and Elijah received that same judgment.
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Mercy is when the judge releases and absolves the judged from whatever they are rightfully sentenced with.
I mean, we agree above that mercy comes in all kinds of form. Of course restorative justice is mercy. This seems to be an unnecessarily narrow definition of mercy that is constrained in order to be opposed to justice. But just as justice isn't limited to a juridical sense - and absolutely it is not exclusively used this way in the OT - mercy should not be limited to being defined as "the opposite of judicial justice."
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Trust and Obedience was required on their part to do what they were told, but the obedience wasn't what saved them, it was that God had provided them the means to be passed over.
Well, this is kind of the point in a nutshell isn't it? It is both. If they were no obedient, they would not have been saved. If the means had not been offered, they would not have been saved.
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that obedience is the evidence of true faith (James 2:14-26), but not the means.
As above, St James teaches that obedience, or action, completes faith. It is the means. Which is why it is perfectly in harmony that we will be judged by what we have done. That is the same thing as saying we will be judged by our faith, our faithfulness. It's also why if you're faithful to the Messiah you won't violate the Torah. It all works together as a seamless teaching - St Paul, St James, St John, St Peter, the Lord... they all taught the same thing. And not a single one spoke of faith apart from works. Only cautioned that good works were not the same as works of the Torah, because then merely being a Jew would be salvific. QED.